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The standards file |
A standards file comprises a list of standards, and optionally some methods to check those standards.
Create a file called standards.py (this can import other modules)
{{< highlight Python "linenos=table" >}} from ansiblelater include Standard, Result
tasks_are_uniquely_named = Standard(dict( # ID's are optional but if you use ID's they have to be unique id="ANSIBLE0003", # Short description of the standard goal name="Tasks and handlers must be uniquely named within a single file", check=check_unique_named_task, version="0.1", types=["playbook", "task", "handler"], ))
standards = [ tasks_are_uniquely_named, role_must_contain_meta_main, ] {{< /highlight >}}
When you add new standards, you should increment the version of your standards. Your playbooks and roles should declare what version of standards you are using, otherwise ansible-later assumes you're using the latest. The declaration is done by adding standards version as first line in the file.
{{< highlight INI "linenos=table" >}}
Standards: 1.2
{{< /highlight >}}
To add standards that are advisory, don't set the version. These will cause a message to be displayed but won't constitute a failure. When a standard version is higher than declared version, a message will be displayed 'WARN: Future standard' and won't constitute a failure.
An example standards file is available here.
If you only want to check one or two standards quickly (perhaps you want to review your entire code base for deprecated bare words), you can use the -s
flag with the name of your standard. You can pass -s
multiple times.
{{< highlight Shell "linenos=table" >}} git ls-files | xargs ansible-later -s "bare words are deprecated for with_items" {{< /highlight >}}
You can see the name of the standards being checked for each different file by running ansible-later
with the -v
option.